Understand SC

Evictions

Episode Summary

In South Carolina, renters facing removal from their homes have to be armed with cash to fight it. We talked to reporter Thad Moore about how South Carolina handles eviction appeals and why some tenants see their cases thrown out if they can't come up with thousands of dollars in a matter of days.

Episode Notes

In South Carolina, renters have to be armed with cash to fight an eviction. 
When tenants facing removal from their homes want to have their case heard in a higher court, they're often required to come up with thousands of dollars in a matter of days.
Ambiguities in the law make the issue particularly murky and lead to wide disparities in what tenants are required to pay. It could be as little as $0, or as much as all of the back rent a landlord says the tenant owes, plus another three months' rent up-front. 
It's all up to the judges who handle these cases. 
This week, we talked to reporter Thad Moore who recently read through court records from across the state to look for these types of cases. He found that, since the beginning of 2019, more than 120 tenants in South Carolina who were appealing their evictions had their cases thrown out because they couldn't come up with the money required. 
We asked him about how this policy compares to the way other states handle eviction appeals, why some housing attorneys say the practice is unfair and what our watchdog reporters are looking out for as evictions become a key indicator to watch during the coronavirus pandemic.